South China Morning Post

EU set to blacklist more firms for breaching sanctions

- Finbarr Bermingham finbarr.bermingham@scmp.com

European Union officials planned to inform Chinese diplomats yesterday about the intent to add more Chinese companies to a blacklist because they had helped Russia evade EU sanctions.

The firms stand accused of buying European-made goods that are not permitted to be sold to Russia, then exporting them to Russian military buyers.

The aim of the meeting was to enlist Beijing’s help in closing the loopholes, people familiar with the planning said.

Previous consultati­ons like this have resulted in the removal of Chinese companies from a draft blacklist before it got published, after Beijing committed to stopping the trade.

Those earlier talks came after a frantic bout of lobbying in Brussels by Fu Cong, then the Chinese ambassador to the EU, who recently took up a new post at the United Nations in New York. Fu has yet to be replaced in Brussels.

Even so, three mainland entities and one registered in Hong Kong were blackliste­d in February for flouting EU sanctions, as part of the bloc’s 13th package of punitive measures to hobble Russia’s military. The latest salvo comes as Brussels readies its 14th package.

The Chinese entities form part of a broader group of companies that also include some from Hong Kong. Bloomberg first reported on the latest list, saying the firms from China had “provided Russia with satellite images and other technologi­es”.

China’s supplying of dual-use goods – products that have military applicatio­ns – to Russia has concerned Europe, as the West looks to support Ukraine on the battlefiel­d. Beijing says it is neutral in the war, now in its third year, but Brussels broadly considers it to have sided with Moscow.

In Berlin on Thursday, Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g accused China of “propping up Russia’s war economy”. “Last year, Russia imported 90 per cent of its microelect­ronics from China, used to produce missiles, tanks, and aircraft. China is also working to provide Russia with improved satellite capabiliti­es and imagery. All of this helps Moscow to inflict more death and destructio­n on Ukraine,” he said.

Even apart from Ukraine, yesterday’s meeting would come at a testy time for EU-China relations, with a series of explosive events piling pressure on bilateral ties all week. On Tuesday, EU officials spearheade­d raids on the local offices of Chinese surveillan­ce kit maker Nuctech in Warsaw and Rotterdam.

Officers sought evidence of state subsidies from Beijing, as part of a preliminar­y investigat­ion under the new EU foreign subsidies regulation. A pipeline of cases is believed to be coming under this tool in the months ahead.

A separate EU trade probe was launched on Wednesday into market access for EU firms into China’s vast medical devices sector. This was the first case begun under the bloc’s internatio­nal procuremen­t instrument, intended to pry open public tenders outside Europe that are closed to EU operators.

Also on Thursday, the Belgian foreign ministry called in the Chinese ambassador after local media reported that Els Van Hoof, chair of the country’s Foreign Affairs Committee, had been hacked by China.

“Members of Parliament must be able to work freely. That is the basis of our democracy,” Foreign Minister Hadja Lahbib wrote on X.

“Following recent reports of intimidati­on and hacking of Belgian parliament­arians, the Chinese ambassador will be summoned,” according to Lahbib.

All these topics are expected to be discussed on Monday, when Executive Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs Ma Zhaoxu comes to Brussels for talks with EU officials, sources told the South China Morning Post.

They will also no doubt be on the agenda when President Xi Jinping touches down in Paris the following weekend. Xi is expected in the French capital for talks with his counterpar­t Emmanuel Macron from May 5 to 7, according to media reports.

Hungarian media reported on Thursday that Xi would also travel to Budapest for talks with Prime Minister Viktor Orban from May 8 to 10. He is also expected to visit the Serbian capital of Belgrade.

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